PAGE FOUR namnaratiovsi e wnbecmiic t 14 _for JO years ) d pasezs | taass ye* ie »<> sejrancec rernadniilg o acron on enbactiiorn vet en Lo on mm t n arnnnmn y . "OUR BEST SELLER" ‘e have sold Monarch Coffee for 10 years it has been our best seller froth the beginâ€" HAYES & MURPHY, Ae [EWORLD‘S GREATEST SECTION pcmnte Noet esns Sitingliont fioks® Highland Park Newsâ€"Co. Tel. H. P. 904 k "Several thousand> checks: rema: yet to be signed and mailed and if can have the new addresses R have ‘moved but who have not yet reckived their refund the: entire matâ€" iter will be greatly expedited." | â€" | We would appreciate very much," said Mrs, Réinecke today, "if tho who have moved their residence since making their 1923 return would sen( us their present address, A !‘p- } of checks ‘have come back rearked, ‘Moved, left jo address.‘ If these re, turned checks are premitted to ac cumulate it canâ€"readily be seen ho difficult it will be to have all the g come tax refund checks : ¢ ighed aj promptly as the government would like for it . will be conside table h: convenience to carry these smm ac counts on the government bioks fo an ‘ir';;eï¬nite period. g1 /o« "I ‘hope every person who cha his orsher address ' thi:ï¬l promptly send us their ne address. We can then check up o letters containing refund checks return them to the new ad { Much is said about p 9 rights of minorities, and fee the need of it when the whole family holler for money. i8 , } These are two things im rta those who have an income * coming .to them.. It has € during . the sending out of ref checks that quite a number of pe sons to whom checks have been mai have changed their address and th checks have been returned to , of Mrs. Mabel G. Reinecke, collec of Internal revenue. 880 Cakll1 4 Uncle Sam wants the address <of myegtyer of income tax who has moved since filing the 19282 curn also, Uncle Sam may, be hG [ding & check for you. > BP If You Have Moved Since Fi 1923 Return; Also You May Receive Rebate | â€" F UNCLE SAM WANTS _ | _ TAXPAYER‘$ ADDRESS THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS,. HIGHLAND PARK. ILLINOIS L. J. RICE Mb rabintiod ub Weanmers dnw sepubs .“ém es eoaese on arsnt e enc rieg E::ng,g;fg;:;.;.g;;;.-‘.\':;-':%ï¬zs:-‘:ii Miratece nlntermenrentias hn _ E. F. PRATT 39 S. St. Johns Ave. â€"~ Tel. H. P. 1103 i8 Aiwutiignsioeiipai» »sisbate W dn sn cooini» nctute Well, who would begrudge the print er his higi‘phce in American indusâ€" try? He makes known the sayings, writings, a'\:d doings of other men, and for that service the world is much beholden to him.. Much ink has gone over the rollers. since the . times of Gutenberg and Caxton, and now the craft of the printer‘s hand is supâ€" plemented with machinery of artful capabilities,. ~But manuscripts conâ€" tinue to réeflect frailties and fallibiliâ€" ties, and printers must still grope for the meaning of absent minds. Printers are much with the world and in close touch with its sham and artifice. Small wondeér that they should become dour and gray with brooding on the inâ€" justice of "typographical errors." But the great peace will come when the last line is set at last, and rule and sti:lhepht by, and type and setter both ‘ in proper makeup le. Others will then do for the printer the mortuary honor to print his name in "caps," and. perhaps accord him the dignity of the fourâ€"stroke dash. And like as not, his soul would remain with his life, and would relax no standard of his craftâ€"probably the Milky Way would seem only "wrong font." ing Maher) Snlly pay than 160. yoars i $ pay ten years ago, says the National Industrial Conâ€" ference No news or novelty in that s rent. But it may be worth knowing that at the time of making the â€"report, printers held first place in the itude of their weekly earnâ€" ings. ï¬c and magazine printâ€" ers received an average weekly pay of $36.14. Rated second were the iron and steel workers with an average pay of $38.57 a week. And in third place stood the automobile factory workers with $31.12 a week. Next in amount of their pay checks were the book and job printers, foundry and machine shop workers, agricultural implement workers, chemical factory employes, and workers in electrical and rubber factories. :. _ "BOOB McN‘! \._~â€"_ By RUBE GOLD PRINTERS LEADERS OF SKILLED WORKERS Including the Fa ALBERT L , 380 Central A Tel. H. P. 567 "TOONERVILLE "JUST BOY" "FELIX," the K By By Fontaine By Fere the Rev. last the be t1 auto ]m%smo ‘PASTOR *C8 HAD WORKED HERE the [parishioners léarned: that the Rev.| Mr. Anderson, who disappeared last | Saturday, had been rushed to the ty hospital in Chicago to be d for injuries recgived in an automobile accident. . =* ‘ Witnesses declared the clergyman stepyied in front of a machine at Washington and Canal streets, Chiâ€" cago| They thought he was a laborer. Then a letter addressed to his wife Wwas found, and detectives discovered that |they had the man for whom the St. Joseph police had been searching for four days: ¢ outlook is said to be bright in the farm districts, particularly when the girls come out in their new store clo for cattle shows. ie3 Sttange to say the college authorâ€" itiesstill persist in asking candidates for gdmission what they know about algebra, Latin, etc., instead of tryâ€" ing out to see if they can play footÂ¥all. f . Néws from the Chinese war indiâ€" ca that there is nothing woozy a Gen, Wu, that Gen. Lu is a lulu, and that Gen. Chang is a noblé chink. j sociologists ask us whither are we ing, but if the folks won‘t anything stronger than lemonâ€" ade, they will probably be able to keepiin the road. : : ~â€"â€"__;> /.. i Rev, Leslic : Anderson, pastor of Efl!il!“fll church at St. Joâ€" geph) Mich mysteriously | : missing from| his parish for several days, and who |attempted to commit suicide in Chickgo last week by stepping in front of an: automobile, worked for twl(i’ Ar.{:'fmm ;Sanvmlo,n: sull‘ cady farm at 6 t was revealed in the investigations in Chickgo. ; ite the gossip which led Rev. And to run away and attempt suicifie, members of his church at St. Joseph, Mich., informally decided that |they wanted him to remain. as their pastor. i A |meeting was called soon after And suicit St. that thei \ Y‘S ON imical Kat l mous TROLLEY out from under the said. When Sheriff Ahistrom thehonuhloe.hdbavhb the fact that his feet weâ€". V. M. Reed, special agent 1, | mt.ammn, ";: Waukegan Saturday to take to St. Charles school ‘â€hobo"' ; Davis of Highwood, w escaped ; the school Sept. 12. $ | Young Davis, who was c . with implication in numerous tptiberâ€" fes, flong / the | North Shore, After Highwood under C« tress at the home of a fri.ar $ **~ RETURNS YOUNG MAN f TO REFORM Snée:-lAéui of P-Du:c ciâ€" * To St. Charles 'ik | Dec. 6â€"HowL ife Begins; Bj theFultarontnl es °¢ Dec. 13=â€"â€"Sea W d Sea Ur. chins; Toad~ Praits; . Ostr “2 Titmice; A to New ork Zoo; Finest ouEPousl‘t‘( * i 1 s & Nov. 20â€" First Ami (Plains : and :Bopl ;:u.u)t 0 flm:: mé‘db ;r.msxy“p“ Th ¢ Cuckoos; Plants '1&; Stomachs. 1. ) > (d 3 Nov, 22â€"LadyBird; Lizards from Everywhere; ;‘:‘flmmipgt;,lln:. Born, f-ivo m D'ie.n"v 4 Nov. 15â€"â€"Birds of Passage? ‘Yoseâ€" mite, The Valley of nw.un&k. ll*hx tl"! L ‘Oct. 4 ~â€"|Wild f Greenwich, m« > 8. : 2. > 4 Oct. 11â€"Th %&J | William EUi iffis, New Y city. ¢ §0. s 3 . Nov. 8â€"Along the Hoonhngl*nfl (prehistoric animals) ; Ant Lion}; Naâ€" vajo Indians; In a Drop of | ah:: Oct. 18â€"Children N Enmv!rn: g s«?’& 3 and Buzzards; Sloths and MJ to a Blrd.lmfloï¬; ‘Why Elé phants Leave Home; Pond fe; In sects that Mimic. j x: i . Ror* 1 Trailing Affican WilR As Dec. 6â€"Among!the mï¬pfl dians. Mr. Walter McClintock, M.A., Pittsburgh, Penna. . . â€" } Oct. 11 â€"â€"â€" kphllaxhhn* uqi 7 Polar t $ w( Nov. 29â€"The u-a-tutm.trq Lieut.â€"Col. J. H.‘ Patterson, D.S.Q London. 4.4 & i | Nov. 22â€"Babylon ‘as a Céfitre 0| Civilization, with Special Referenc to the Excavations at Kish. (Undé: amgï¬y?:& Ev' F1 U t nder th auspices of Capt. Marshall Fielc Professor Ira M. Price, University © Nw.lbâ€"?hu‘&ow bra. Mr. B. R. Baumgardt, geles, Calif. _ ‘:’;;‘ Nov 1â€"The Gateway of | manes Lievictol Charike Welnasl Furlong, FR.G.S., Bé Oct. 25â€"Tribes of 8 ( thur B. :%nmuu,‘ 1%)4 Fayâ€"Cooper Cole, leader of t dition. & §4 £4% Minutes in . Dr.â€" Willien Bee r, 1 t w.gg W‘ 3' l a 1 l In i to these afterngon le« for children have . P 1 an will be held | thcumd itre |of the Saturday mornings of Octob and November. ‘These free prb will consist of motion picturds whic will run continuously from 9:00 | t 12:80. Captain Kleinschmidth m: Adventures, Why +Elephants 1 Home,and}t:ookfl;tbeN ar examples of the films to be shown. Pa ns siftere! Witory, Aiifptrnte tra &A w ry, . t ï¬nn'h:‘hvhm mpeon mg of Field on Saturd 4 noons at ï¬?a’do& turihg t months of ‘MIâ€N mber.| â€" The ma _of the eft has taken great pains to prochre th best lecturers available and will brin men from as far as Bostol M York ;ndf“n Francisco, " . noted for r ~ formation. mm note Prof. Ira M. Price of the Unive 6t of Chicago and Dr, William Elliof Griffis are among the well known lec turers selected. o f &MF: ; !ï¬ List of Subjects And | Speakers Given | _ ;. c U op mt ARE FREE TO THE PUBL THURSDAY, OCTOBER PCOR onl sppetmatnie: 18 Ahh(hn.$ d Davis beca ‘of ftotm t mattress. | TH B o